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The one where Lisa is addicted to calling the Cory hotline. Maggie is playing with her toy phone, and it’s driving Lisa crazy.
Seer of the tapes! Knower of the episodes!
The one where Lisa is addicted to calling the Cory hotline. Maggie is playing with her toy phone, and it’s driving Lisa crazy.
LaForge because obviously
MacDougal because she knows that isolinear chips are not toys
Argyle because he knows that Kosinski is full of crap
Logan because he’s an arrogant dick
And her first officer, Stockholm syndrome man.
All hu-mans look alike.
Soon the world will burn in nuclear fire… again!
Mike Duncan’s Revolutions podcast (especially series 3 covering the French Revolution) and his The History of Rome series.
White noise. I bought a white noise machine years ago when I lived near a large emergency room that had ambulances going by all day every day. It really helped with the sirens, and when I moved away I kept using the machine. My brain now interprets the white noise as profound silence, and I sleep so deeply that I don’t know how I ever got by without it.
Inmate firefighters are indeed inmate labor, but the issue is whether inmate firefighters are slaves. I don’t think that they are, and I also think that lumping them together with other forms of inmate labor (particularly those that benefit private interests) is misleading and hyperbolic when discussing that point.
I think you’re conflating the general issue of inmate labor with the particular issue of inmate firefighters.
But in this case they are volunteers. They specifically applied to the firefighting program.
There’s certainly cause for discussion about the ethics, etc. but calling it slavery or involuntary servitude is hyperbole.
Citation needed.
Well, yes, just like me and my job, they can quit. What part of that suggests slavery?
How so?
It’s not involuntary, though. They have to apply for the program, and can stop if they want.
Removed by mod
MacBeth has left the chat
Many different kinds of organizations are organized as corporations. Charities, newspapers, churches, etc. If the amendment was not carefully written, it could be construed to deny important rights, such as press freedom or religious freedom, to organizations that really ought to be protected. Similarly, the protections against unwarranted search and seizure or taking of property for pubic use without compensation should probably continue to cover corporations.
Really, the only problem I see WRT corporations having constitutional rights is the decision that political spending is protected speech. The other constitutional rights are generally not problematic.
So maybe something like this:
No person, whether natural born human or legal fiction, shall spend, donate, or otherwise make valuable contributions to any candidate or campaign, if said person is not entitled to vote in the election for such candidate or campaign.
Only natural born human beings shall be entitled to vote in any election.
At least “crushed by asteroid” is not contagious.